Passages
Comprehensive notes, formulas, and practice questions for Passages.
Passages
Passages
What you'll learn
- How verbal reasoning passages test logic, structure, and critical reading beyond literal comprehension.
- To map argument structure — conclusion, premises, assumptions — in short prose passages.
- To answer main point, role of sentence, and logical role questions accurately.
- To prepare for Class 12 verbal reasoning and law/entrance-style passage blocks.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Foundations
Verbal: Passages may be argumentative (claim + support) or descriptive (facts + implications). First task: identify author's main conclusion.
Structural labels:
| Sentence role | Clue phrases |
|---|---|
| Conclusion | therefore, thus, must, should |
| Premise | because, since, given that |
| Counter | however, although, critics argue |
| Example | for instance, such as |
Question families:
- Main idea — umbrella over whole passage
- Inference — must follow from text
- Strengthen/weaken — new info impact on argument
- Method — how author argues (analogy, cause-effect)
Level 2 — Exam depth
Scope discipline: Passage about urban transport → option about global climate may be true but irrelevant if not linked.
Parallel reasoning: Identify pattern: "A because B" and match in answer choices.
Tone in argumentative passages: Distinguish author voice from quoted critics.
Time blocks: 6–8 min per passage set — mark and return rather than stall one item.
Note-taking shorthand: C for conclusion, P1 P2 premises in margin.
Worked example
Identify conclusion and premise
"Public parks improve mental health because they offer green space and social contact. Therefore cities should protect park budgets."
Conclusion: **Cities should protect park budgets.**
Premises: Parks improve mental health; mechanism green space + social contact.
Weaken candidate: "Maintained rooftops provide equal benefit" — attacks premise pathway.
Role of a sentence
"'For example, Medellín's cable cars reduced commute times' — **illustrates** a general claim about infrastructure improving access, not the main conclusion itself."
Role questions ask function, not truth of example city.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Extreme answer choices | Always/never attract | Moderate passage → moderate option |
| Confusing example with thesis | Memorable detail | Ask: is this proof or illustration? |
| Outside knowledge strengthen | Fact true but unrelated | Must affect premise-conclusion link |
| Skipping counterargument sentences | Miss author's nuance | Note however-clauses |
Quick check
- Difference between premise and assumption?
- Write conclusion of any 3-sentence editorial you read today.
- How does 'for instance' signal sentence role?
- Stretch: One way to weaken " homework improves grades" without denying all benefit.
Revision tip: Revisit adjacent topics in Verbal Reasoning before mixed practice on Passages.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Passages.
Exam strategy
Label the author's main conclusion in three words max before reading options. For strengthen/weaken items, predict the answer before looking — then match. Eliminate options that are true in life but not tied to the argument structure. Passage sets are sequential; do not leave an entire passage block blank — attempt inference items using elimination.
Practice connections
Passage reasoning complements reading comprehension but prioritises argument skeleton over literary appreciation. Practise one assumption and one weaken item daily from any editorial. Link to grouping puzzles: both require eliminating options inconsistent with constraints — here textual constraints. For CLAT-style sets, maintain a margin symbol key: C conclusion, P premise, A assumption candidate.
Keep a dedicated notebook spread for this topic: one page for methods, one for worked mistakes, and one for mixed drill from the Practice tab. Review weekly by explaining the core idea aloud in under sixty seconds without notes.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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